Skip to product information
1 of 1

Fermentation: Vital or Chemical Process?

Publisher:

Regular price $149.00
Regular price $149.00 Sale price $149.00
Sold out
Human knowledge of the conversion of grape must into wine and of cereal dough into bread is as old as agriculture. This book is a study of the ways this phenomenon (fermentation) has been considere...
Read More
  • 27 October 2006
View Product Details
Human knowledge of the conversion of grape must into wine and of cereal dough into bread is as old as agriculture. This book is a study of the ways this phenomenon (fermentation) has been considered since Aristotle to be analogous to natural processes such as human digestion. During 1200–1600 A.D., alchemists wrote “ferments” or “elixirs” that could turn lead into gold. A century later, in Newton’s time, many physicians and natural philosophers considered fermentation to be an important natural process. The 18th century was marked by Lavoisier’s celebrated experiment on alcoholic fermentation. The 19th-century debate about the nature of this process was concluded by Buchner’s preparation of an active cell-free yeast extract. From 1910–1940 many researchers participated in the identification of the chemical intermediates and catalysts in the multi-enzyme pathway of alcoholic fermentation.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $149.00
Pages: 144
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: History of Science and Medicine Library
Publication Date: 27 October 2006
ISBN: 9789004152687
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
Joseph S. Fruton, Ph.D. (1934) Biochemistry, Columbia University, is Eugene Higgins Professor Emeritus, Yale University. His latest publication is Methods and Styles in the Development of Chemistry (2002).